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           The principal unit in traditional Kurdish society was the tribe, typically led by a sheikh, or an aga, whose rule                      was firm. Tribal identification and the sheikh's authority are still felt, though to a lesser degree, in the villages.              Detribalization proceeded rapidly as Kurdish culture became urbanized and was nominally assimilated into                       several nations.

Kurdish nationalism, a recent phenomenon, came about through the conjunction of a variety of factors, including British introduction of the concept of private property, the partition of traditional Kurdistan by modern neighbouring states, and the influence of British, U.S., and Soviet interests in the Persian Gulf region. These factors and others combined with the flowering of a nationalist movement among a very small minority of urban, intellectual Kurds.

 

 

           By Jalal Najmaddin  in 1984